Marketplace | Gordon Correrahttps://www.marketplace.org/author/75776/feed.xml
enDoes the government like what you're up to on Facebook? https://www.marketplace.org/topics/world/bbc-world-service/does-government-what-youre-facebook

Next time you take out your smart phone for a game of Angry Birds or to check Facebook, there's a chance someone's watching you. Documents leaked by Edward Snowden and reported on by The New York Times, the Guardian, and Pro Publica show that the NSA and Britain’s Government Communications Headquarters could be tracking data from some mobile apps. To hear the story from the BBC's security correspondent Gordon Corera, click the audio player above.

A military operation is underway to free hostages, including several Americans, being held at a natural gas facility in Algeria. It's believed the action may be in response to French military operations against Islamist militants in neighbouring Mali.

The kidnappers, which Algeria says are linked to a senior al-Qaeda commander in the region, occupied the plant on Wednesday morning and took many workers captive.

The plant supplies gas to Europe and is a joint operation between BP, Norwegian energy firm Statoil, and Algeria's state oil company Sonatrach.

Reports suggest some of the hostages may have escaped while others have been killed during the operation by Algerian government forces.

The BBC's security correspondent Gordon Correra says these facilities are rarely targeted and the crisis will raise questions about the level of security that companies and governments provide for foreign energy workers at other potentially vulnerable sites.